Jean Prouvé École de Dieulouard Room 10
International Style The Boyd Collection II. Room 10
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1440 W Hubbard St Chicago IL 60642 312 563 0020 wright20.com
auction 8 November 2018 11 am central
II. Room 10
I. Masterworks II. Room 10 III. Life of Design IV. Word + Image
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the boyd collection II. room 10
Jean Prouvé Room 10 from École de Dieulouard France, 1952 | Ateliers Jean Prouvé enameled steel, enameled aluminum, pine, steel, aluminum 28 w × 33 d × 13.5 h ft (8.53 × 10.06 × 1.63 m) literature Jean Prouvé Complete Works Volume 3: 1944–1954, Sulzer, ppg. 328–329 discuss commission Jean Prouvé, Galerie Patrick Seguin and Sonnabend Gallery, pg. 541 illustrates related drawings and maquette Jean Prouve: Architect for Better Days, Luma Foundation, pg. 166 provenance École de Dieulouard, France Pierre Bergé & Associés, Paris, Arts Décoratifs & Design, 7 June 2012 Galerie Mandalian-Paillard, Paris Collection of Michael and Gabrielle Boyd $500,000 – 700,000
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An aircraft manufacturer said that if planes were produced like buildings, they wouldn’t fly. Jean ProuvÊ
the boyd collection II. room 10
left Drawing for the Exposition de Zurich: École “Coque”, three standard sections. Photo: Georges Meguerditchian. © CNAC / MNAM / Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY © 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris center Prop Type Maquette © Centre Pompidou below Drawing for “Coque” system
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One doesn’t sit in front of a drawing board and say: ‘I’m going to build a house like this or like that’. Never has such an idea crossed my mind. Quite the converse, I have always come to architecture asking myself the question: ‘how could I build this construction?’ The religion that the architects follow isn’t keen on this builder’s reasoning. Jean Prouvé
the boyd collection II. room 10
Room 10: Jean Prouvé, École de Dieulouard
Michael Webb
above Model for the “Coque” school system left The present lot, Room 10 from École de Dieulouard, installed in Wright’s exhibition space
auction 8 november 2018
Few reputations have soared as stunningly as that of Jean Prouvé (1901-84), a metal craftsman turned designer and builder. Le Corbusier declared that Prouvé “combined the soul of an engineer with that of an architect”, but—since he lacked professional qualifications—such appreciation was rare in his lifetime. Ironically, it was he, not the architects, who brought good design to the masses. He is finally receiving his due as an intuitive genius. “Never design anything that cannot be made” was his mantra, and his strong, simple pieces are imbued with the personality of a skilled artisan, who sketched, prototyped, and refined hundreds of designs before putting them into production. He cared nothing for fashion or social acceptance, and everything he created has a timeless character. Like Gerrit Rietveld, whose father crafted traditional furniture, Prouvé learned the skill of ironworking from his father and other metalworkers. As an artisan who was born, lived and died in Nancy, a provincial capital in northeastern France, he was a hands-on innovator, welding sheet metal and opening his own atelier in 1923. In 1947 he established a factory in Maxéville, outside Nancy, but lost it within a decade. Nothing deterred, he built a house for his family from scavenged parts, and collaborated with Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand on their projects while continuing to pursue his own. Furniture and buildings were problem-solving exercises, different only in scale. The consistent goal was to achieve maximum utility with a minimum of materials at the lowest possible cost. His chairs, tables, cabinets and a swinging light were produced in quantity for schools and universities; the revenue from these, partition systems, and window mechanisms subsidized his experiments in prefabrication.
Collectors covet authentic vintage originals and these have become increasingly rare and expensive. It is in the “architecture” of Prouvé— the buildings—that one can best capture the spirit of the man and problem solving designer. He described himself as a “constructeur,” applying his ingenuity and mechanical skills to the provision of shelter and the reform of the construction industry. He declared that he was “haunted by a passion to build,” and realized that ambition on a big scale in 1939, when he and two architects completed the Maison du Peuple in Clichy. Frank Lloyd Wright was deeply impressed. Postwar achievements include the Aluminum Centenary Pavilion in Paris and the Pump Room in the spa city of Evian. A pioneer of prefabrication, Prouvé designed houses and schools as modular kits of parts that could be transported to any site, swiftly assembled, and just as easily dis-assembled and relocated. Room 10 from École de Dieulouard, presented here, not only can be relocated, but also reimagined, due to the flexibility of the modular plan. This cantilevered painted-steel structure can be repurposed for any number of uses—from an open pavilion without walls, to the first or second story of an enclosed house, to a skeletal framework sculpture, imbedded in a large open interior space.
Room 10 (identified by the classroom number stenciled on its door) is one of four surviving modules from a school in Dieulouard, a small town in northeastern France. Three of the four extant structures have been repainted in fire engine red—Room 10 is the only one of the quartet to retain its original Prouvé pale yellow paint. Room 10 comes with the original French oak wall panels (in original finish!) replete with original aluminum hooks, and metal roof, which complement the intricate joints of the structural frame. Another example of this model was re-assembled for permanent exhibition for the Tokyo Museum of Modern Art at Okayama, Japan, in September, 2016.
Prouvé created a series of tropical houses This installation was supervised by French for the administrators of French colonies in architect Alain Banneel, who is an authority West Africa, three of which were recovered and expert (with hands on experience) on from Brazzaville, scarred with bullet holes from Prouvé prefabricated houses and structures. the civil war. These architectural nomads were Banneel is one of the central characters, his proudest achievements and he dreamed along with Paris gallerist Patrick Seguin, of creating them en masse to solve the postin the exhilarating adventure of the Prouvé war housing crisis in France. Tradition-bound demountable house resurgence. The journey builders, an oppressive bureaucracy, and public began when Banneel restored one of three resistance to innovation frustrated that goal tropical houses that architecture historian and production was limited to Prouvé’s Robert Rubin acquired in Brazzaville, Congo. small factory. The trip continued when Banneel exhibited the Brazzaville structure in New Haven at the Yale School of Architecture; then the odyssey went on to Los Angeles where Banneel supervised the installation at the Hammer Museum. Amazingly this one nomadic structure went on to be shown at the Centre Pompidou in Paris— and finally at the Nancy Museum of Arts, in the hometown of Jean Prouvé. The legend of the traveling Brazzaville house was the original inspiration behind the idea of collecting the demountable structures of Prouvé. Buvette de la source Cachat à Evian by Jean Prouvé and Maurice Novarina. © CNAC / MNAM / Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY
the boyd collection II. room 10
He cared nothing for fashion or social acceptance, and everything he created has a timeless character.
above Maison du peuple de Clichy (1935–1939), Eugène Beaudoin and Marcel Lods architects, Bodiansky engineer, Jean Prouvé constructeur. © CNAC / MNAM / Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY © 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris left Southern view of École de Dieulouard (1951–1952), Jean Brossard and Louis Weiler, architects. Jean Prouvé constructeur. Photo © Erika SulzerKleinemeier © 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris
Each of the propped-type schoolrooms (like Room 10) were assembled as a linear sequence of these modules, which could easily be extended to accommodate growth. Modules from other schools were repurposed: a trio were joined to form an architect’s office, another became a chapel, and a few have toured to museums and galleries around the world.
For lovers of modern design, Prouvé is a link to the pioneers who extolled the machine as an object of beauty. And he followed in the footsteps of 19th-century engineers who exposed the structural frame of train sheds, bridges and the Eiffel Tower, even as architects and arbiters of taste sought to conceal these skeletons behind ornate masonry facades. It’s the triumph of honesty over artifice.
There is a two-fold appeal to these architectural gems. First, the adaptability that was built into the very concept of structures that sometimes traveled thousands of miles to realize their purpose and then returned to find a different role. Expert counsel on assembly and possible uses is readily available from the architect Alain Banneel—and the potential of these structures is limited only by the imagination of their owners. One could imagine the skeleton standing on a rise as a folly in the tradition of 18th-century landscape gardens, or close-up as a Constructivist sculpture. It might be glazed to serve as a garden pavilion, an artist’s studio, or a pool cabana.
As architecture professor Mark Wigley wrote in his essay, The Low-Flying Architecture of Jean Prouvé, “The very depth of his commitment to lightness, mobility, efficiency and the model of aircraft construction isolated him from all the architects who claimed to be inspired by those very goals but never really considered architecture to be a kind of machine. Like [Buckminster] Fuller, he thought architecture should fly and insisted that this required a complete rethinking of the way buildings were made and the role of the architect.” 1 It’s worth noting that Fuller, justly famed as a visionary, was far less practical than Prouvé; neither the Dymaxion car nor house
got beyond the prototype stage, and he is best remembered for the geodesic dome. Prouvé was a firmly-grounded visionary and his greatest legacy is the Centre Pompidou in Paris, where he convinced the jury he chaired to award the commission to two young and inexperienced architects, Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano. Each piece of vintage original Jean Prouvé furniture is a universe in itself. Alison and Peter Smithson noted, to paraphrase, that the design DNA of a Mies building is present in a Barcelona Chair. Prouvé himself said: “there is no difference between the construction of an item of furniture and that of a house.” By extension, then, to consider repurposing a complete and all-original kit for a Jean Prouvé demountable building is an intriguing prospect. The functionalist Prouvé conceptual essence can be felt and seen in a Standard Chair and Room 10. The idea is integral to both; the only thing different is scale. Whether small or large, here or there—wherever the designs of Jean Prouvé reside in the world for the moment, they are historic and heroic monuments.
Jean Prouvé: Architect for Better Days (Luma Foundation / Phaidon, 2017) 1
For how many years do we build today? Houses should be built to last 25 to 30 years. What is built in concrete lasts for centuries, it cannot be destroyed again. For urban planners, such long lasting construction is a catastrophe, it blocks potential construction sites [‌] I’d much rather see buildings for about 30 years (one generation), so that afterward they can be moved or torn down (used again or sold on the second-hand market). Our children will want to do something completely different. Jean ProuvÊ
the boyd collection II. room 10
L’œuvre de Jean Prouvé existe par le parcours de l’homme dans un total engagement. Une famille de peintres, une éducation du dessin et de la forge, une connaissance de la matière et des hommes, une ouverture vers les autres pour des rencontres, pour le vivre ensemble, créer ensemble. Le travail de la matière, la malléabilité du fer, à chaud à la forge l’homme le transforme, à froid le pliage permet la réalisation de sections à inertie variable, juste la matière nécessaire alors que l’on en manque.
Jean Prouvé: A Limitless Mind
Alain Banneel
Le regard sur l’évolution du monde, parois légères de carlingues d’avion contre parois maçonnées auto stables. Le rêve d’un monde nouveau est possible. La liberté de créer, de construire sont acquises par la volonté d’indépendance, un atelier, de l’outillage, la réflexion sur le nécessaire et suffisant de matière. L’élégance par la culture du dessin, par la porte ouverte du bureau d’études de l’atelier pour l’accueil d’artistes et d’architectes qui apportent leur réflexion dans un renouvellement permanent. Quand on réunit tous ces paramètres, il me semble que là est le secret d’une grande créativité, d’une forme de liberté de l’homme complet au sens du 17 ème siècle.
The work of Jean Prouvé exists because of his dedication, training, and life experience. He hailed from a family of artists, and received an education in design and forging. He had a deep knowledge of blacksmithing, and was also very socially conscious. He enjoyed meeting, creating and collaborating with other artists throughout his life. He knew how to manipulate his product as a skilled craftsman, transforming iron through hot and cold forging, creating sections of various inertia, even when the material was scarce. Seeing the evolution of the world, the light weight of an aircraft’s fuselage versus the heaviness of a masonry wall, the dream of a new world became possible. His freedom to create and to build was acquired through a desire for independence, in the workshop with his tools, reflecting on the necessary and sufficient materials. The elegance of his work is due to the culture of drawing, to the open door of his studio office to artists and architects who contributed critique and constant re-thinking. With all these qualities combined, therein lies what I believe is the mystery of the great creativity of Jean Prouvé. They explain the limitless mind of this great man, similar to the 17th century Renaissance man.
the boyd collection II. room 10
The Nomadic Constructor: Jean Prouvé and Alain Banneel
Michael Boyd
Drawing of the “crutch” for the proptype classroom (1952). Photo: Georges Meguerditchian. © CNAC / MNAM / Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY © 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris
Alain Banneel has been central to the construction of several demountable structures by Jean Prouvé, as undertaken by Robert Rubin and others, since 2005 when the Tropical House, Brazzaville was retrieved from Africa. The moveable structure went on an elaborate world tour, starting in France, at Presles, in the hometown of Alain Banneel. The project then moved on to New Haven at Yale, where Robert Rubin was studying architecture history. Next the mobile structure was installed in the gardens of the Hammer Museum at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Then the Tropical House was exhibited in Paris, at Centre Georges Pompidou. Eventually the structure was put up in Nancy, the hometown of Jean Prouvé, first at the Musée d’Art Moderne de Nancy, and then at The Musée de Fer before finally being erected in Brussels, at the Citroen Garage. Alain Banneel supervised and spearheaded each of these installations and exhibitions of the Tropical House. Recently, Banneel installed a Propped Type demountable structure from École de Dieulouard—just like Room 10 offered here but repainted a fire engine red—permanently at the Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo.
It takes a keen intuition and deep knowledge of the design and engineering behind these incredible moving buildings to resurrect and stabilize them for use in the 21st century. It is a study in cantilevers, balance, structural strength, and weight distribution, not to mention the many logical intricacies to the assembly. The story of these remarkable popup exhibitions is a journey in itself and Banneel has traveled alongside these works telling the legendary story of the nomadic architecture of Jean Prouvé. Prouvé said “there is no difference between the design of a piece of furniture and that of a house.” Whether considered as scaled-up case work, cabinetry for living, or micro-architecture, Room 10 has flexibility in functional plan and aesthetic architectural presence. The delicacy of the structure belies the ideals pursued. The ultimate goal for pioneering modernist architects and designers was to achieve
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affordable and practical housing for the masses, yet to simultaneously bring forth a successful, serviceable design that can also be sublime, aspirational, and inspiring. Jean Prouvé has seen to this universal and classic appeal with his factory made prefabricated bent sheet steel elements. Alain Banneel is fluent in the language and process of Atelier Prouvé, and because of this, is uniquely qualified to extend the simple and beautiful idea into the future, adapting it for many uses in various environments. The system can be constructed as a pavilion, with or without walls, or it can be constructed as a building, as a first or second story.
left Portrait of Alain Banneel; Bicylette (1941) by Jean Prouvé from the Collection of Michael and Gabrielle Boyd. below Classroom from École de Dieulouard at the Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo. Photo courtesy of Alain Banneel. Prouvé’s Chaise CB22 (c. 1947) disassembled. Photo: Georges Meguerditchian. © CNAC / MNAM / Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Art Resource, NY © 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris
When Modernism’s founding father Walter Gropius visited Oscar Niemeyer’s home built into the natural rock at Canoas, in Brazil, he famously noted that, to paraphrase, although it was beyond beautiful, it was not a “multipliable” design solution; it was not
an idea that could be applied to the issues of mass housing. Niemeyer of course was quick to point out that this was not the point of the project. Great mutual respect aside, Gropius’ comments were misdirected. For a design to be fitting for both public and private use— to offer an elegant solution for the ongoing question of public housing, while also exuding a connoisseur’s high-style, is most unusual. Jean Prouvé however, does just that with his mobile architecture. Another related timeless design from the Atelier Jean Prouvé in Maxéville, is the demountable Standard Chair that shipped flat and functioned flawlessly for Air France, Brazzaville and other remote locations in the 1950s. This chair is a perfect example of what might be called “engineering made visible.” The leg at the underside of the seat flairs out to support weight and then tapers off and down to near weightlessness where the strength of the structure is less critical. There is effervescence and lightness in the design of the Standard Chair that immediately conveys form emerging from engineering requirements, as opposed to form born of a flight of aesthetic fancy. Room 10 echoes this unspoken truth, a no-nonsense approach, culminating in the creation of a design object where function and elegant beauty are integral and atomic, inseparable from each other.
Big or small, here or there, then or now, the timeless and elegant solutions of Jean Prouvé engage both the mind and the body. Practical use and truth in material is the basis of the Prouvé philosophy. The universal aesthetic of beauty and purity is a by-product of this ultimate honesty and practicality, literally coming out of engineering. Yes, Prouvé’s eternal Standard Chair cradles the body, but also soothes the spirit. We as viewer have an immediate and innate sense of the invisible calculations required for a Standard Chair or a Propped Type demountable structure, as we confront each perfect, pared down object. Prouvé’s dream of affordable housing for the masses and his use of industrial methodology for domestic application did not materialize largely during his lifetime, but the crystalline credo remains and guides us—face the world’s design problems with total truth-saying and fearlessness.
the boyd collection II. room 10
above Interior view into École de Dieulouard Photo © Erika Sulzer-Kleinemeier © 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris right General plan of École de Dieulouard Photo © Archives Départementales de Muerthe-et-Moselle, Nancy © 2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris
Steel sheet, aluminum sheet—both can be welded. Where both are balanced with large frame structures that are also welded, and for which there is an evolving language of expression, they will serve as the basis for floors and facades, especially in modern buildings. The will make for lighter construction, and this results in economy as well as speed of execution and installation, quality in terms of the equipment used, economy in terms of mass production, and a new dawn for the new architecture that will characterize our times. Jean Prouvé
the boyd collection II. room 10
auction 8 november 2018
Description
Quantité
Largeur (cm)
Profondeur (cm)
Longueur (cm)
Porte / Door
1
88
3.5
210
Montants muraux / Wall uprights
8
101
9 – 31
313
Embouts de support verticaux / Wall end caps
2
31
Menottes (longues) / Mullion uprights (long)
9
6.5
6
306
Menottes (court) / Mullion uprights (short)
5
6
6.5
158
Mullion with window mechanism
4
6
6.5
159
Cove moulage en aluminium / Cove moulding aluminum
16
105
5
28
Support en aluminium / Window sash channel
8
3
10
210
Panneaux muraux en bois / Wall panels wood
7
98
138
étagères avec des crochets d’origine / Shelves with hooks
7
Panneau en métal émaillé / Enameled metal panel
7
94
2
33
Section de toit / Roof panel
8
104
34
13 meters
Section de toit / Roof panels (for wall sections)
2
56
34
13 meters
Étagères en bois / Wood shelves
18
93
22
3
Moulure de bois (avec boulons d’origine) / Wood molding (with original hardware)
69
7.5
2
177
18.5
7.5
2
295
Mullion avec mécanisme de fenêtre /
Moulure de bois (avec boulons d’origine) / Wood molding (with original hardware)
317
II. Room 10 auction 8 November 2018 11 am central
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